Ukraine: the risk of a ceasefire dwindles

The flow of weapons from the West will continue, and Ukraine will be far readier to launch a sustained and decisive offensive in the spring than it is now. The Russian army might fall apart with just as few more hard knocks during the winter, but it might not—and a serious Ukrainian military setback would revive the threat of an imposed ceasefire.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's offensive was stumbling to a halt on all fronts, but by then Moscow controlled about 20 per cent of Ukraine’s territory. Moreover, Russia controlled almost all of Ukraine’s coast, leaving it only Odesa and a few satellite ports in the far west.
LONDON, U.K.—Two months ago, John Bolton wrote an article in The Hill, the leading politics website in Washington, D.C., warning against a Russian ‘October Surprise.' He suggested that Russian President Vladimir Putin might suddenly cease military operations and declare a ceasefire—wh...

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